Hi Benthej,
you will need to share the A360 folder with the images with us in order to be able to advise (we dont have access to user folders and are not allowed to look at them unless shared with us). you can share it with recap360@autodesk.com
When the engine doesnt stitch its usually due to some aspects of the photos that didnt go well (eg. not enough overlap, bad lighting, strong shadows, object moving etc).
You mentioned that its a guitar... Two issues come in mind:
- Gittares are usually shiny which IS a problem for photogrammetry. We have done succesful acquisitions of shiny objects, but for that one must do really difuse light and use polarisers (or sprays that elminates the shininess)
- many guitarres are mono chromatic, dont have enough 'features' on them. to make a succesful acquisition of flat/non feature rich objects best is to make the environement around it very busy with objects with colors etc.. of if you only care about th egeometry but not the texture/color - you can also put stickers in various shapes on teh guitar
If you havent, please look at the end of the Getting Started guide - it lists best practises for the photos.
If you share the folder with us, we can take a look at the photos and advise what could be done better when photographing for the object in question?
thanks
tanja
Hi Jon,
Have you shared your data to recap360@autodesk.com or with Tatjana directly ?
I didn't found anything close to your description in "recap360" account ...
Can you share again ?
Thanks,
Stephane
I now saw your project and images : its a thin wood guitar
The neck will be difficult to capture well, but the body should work.
Simple improvements that you can do is :
- take more photos : less angle between photos
- add another row from a higher posistion : 3 rows of ~20 images
- try to use a place with more uniform lights (the light enters from one direction only)
- keep most of possible the same focal along your project (this case does not need to change) as it is more constrained
- You shoulduse the SmartCrop option, that will prevent meshing the surrounding environment and focus on the object in the center.
What is already good:
- Good idea of hanging the guitar 🙂 to allow full acquisition
- The framing of the guitar in the picture is good; in general its better to keep the entire object in the picture if its possible.
==> I would add a third acquisition row: one from a higher position
- Few pictures are taken from aside, with very thin view of the guitar
==> try to keep some perspective ; not completely ortho to one side or another
Hope it helps,
Stephane